/*****************************************************************************
NAME:
idle.c -- code for interruptible delays without sleep(3).
ENTRY POINTS:
interruptible_idle() -- delay for some time, interruptible by signal.
THEORY:
Sometimes you need more than one time delay per program, so alarm(3)
won't cut it. This code illustrates time delays with select(2).
AUTHOR:
Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>, 1997. This source code example
is part of fetchmail and the Unix Cookbook, and are released under the
MIT license. Compile with -DMAIN to build the demonstrator.
******************************************************************************/
#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
#include<unistd.h>
#include<signal.h>
#include<errno.h>
#include<fetchmail.h>/* for ROOT_UID */
#ifndefTRUE
#defineTRUE 1
#defineFALSE 0
#endifvolatileint lastsig; /* last signal received */
#ifdefSLEEP_WITH_ALARM/*
* The function of this variable is to remove the window during which a
* SIGALRM can hose the code (ALARM is triggered *before* pause() is called).
* This is a bit of a kluge; the real right thing would use sigprocmask(),
* sigsuspend(). This workaround lets the interval timer trigger the first
* alarm after the required interval and will then generate alarms
* seconds until it is certain that the critical section (ie., the window)
* is exited.
*/static sig_atomic_t alarm_latch = FALSE;
RETSIGTYPE gotsigalrm(int sig)
{
set_signal_handler(sig, gotsigalrm);
lastsig = sig;
alarm_latch = TRUE;
}
#endif/* SLEEP_WITH_ALARM */
#ifdef__EMX__/* Various EMX-specific definitions */staticint itimerflag;
voiditimerthread(void* dummy)
{
if (outlevel >= O_VERBOSE)
report(stderr,
GT_("fetchmail: thread sleeping for %d sec.\n"), poll_interval);
while(1)
{
_sleep2(poll_interval*1000);
kill((getpid()), SIGALRM);
}
}
#endifintinterruptible_idle(int seconds)
/* time for a pause in the action; return TRUE if awakened by signal */
{
int awoken = FALSE;
#ifndef__EMX__
#ifdefSLEEP_WITH_ALARM/* not normally on *//*
* We can't use sleep(3) here because we need an alarm(3)
* equivalent in order to implement server nonresponse timeout.
* We'll just assume setitimer(2) is available since fetchmail
* has to have a BSDoid socket layer to work at all.
*//*
* This code stopped working under glibc-2, apparently due
* to the change in signal(2) semantics. (The siginterrupt
* line, added later, should fix this problem.) John Stracke
* <francis@netscape.com> wrote:
*
* The problem seems to be that, after hitting the interval
* timer while talking to the server, the process no longer
* responds to SIGALRM. I put in printf()s to see when it
* reached the pause() for the poll interval, and I checked
* the return from setitimer(), and everything seemed to be
* working fine, except that the pause() just ignored SIGALRM.
* I thought maybe the itimer wasn't being fired, so I hit
* it with a SIGALRM from the command line, and it ignored
* that, too. SIGUSR1 woke it up just fine, and it proceeded
* to repoll--but, when the dummy server didn't respond, it
* never timed out, and SIGALRM wouldn't make it.
*
* (continued below...)
*/
{
struct itimerval ntimeout;
ntimeout.it_interval.tv_sec = 5; /* repeat alarm every 5 secs */
ntimeout.it_interval.tv_usec = 0;
ntimeout.it_value.tv_sec = seconds;
ntimeout.it_value.tv_usec = 0;
alarm_latch = FALSE;
set_signal_handler(SIGALRM, gotsigalrm); /* first trap signals */
setitimer(ITIMER_REAL,&ntimeout,NULL); /* then start timer *//* there is a very small window between the next two lines *//* which could result in a deadlock. But this will now be *//* caught by periodic alarms (see it_interval) */if (!alarm_latch)
pause();
/* stop timer */
ntimeout.it_interval.tv_sec = ntimeout.it_interval.tv_usec = 0;
ntimeout.it_value.tv_sec = ntimeout.it_value.tv_usec = 0;
setitimer(ITIMER_REAL,&ntimeout,NULL); /* now stop timer */
set_signal_handler(SIGALRM, SIG_IGN);
}
#else/*
* So the workaround I used is to make it sleep by using
* select() instead of setitimer()/pause(). select() is
* perfectly happy being called with a timeout and
* no file descriptors; it just sleeps until it hits the
* timeout. The only concern I had was that it might
* implement its timeout with SIGALRM--there are some
* Unices where this is done, because select() is a library
* function--but apparently not.
*/
{
struct timeval timeout;
timeout.tv_sec = seconds;
timeout.tv_usec = 0;
do {
lastsig = 0;
select(0,0,0,0, &timeout);
} while (lastsig == SIGCHLD);
}
#endif
#else/* EMX */
alarm_latch = FALSE;
set_signal_handler(SIGALRM, gotsigalrm);
_beginthread(itimerthread, NULL, 32768, NULL);
/* see similar code above */if (!alarm_latch)
pause();
set_signal_handler(SIGALRM, SIG_IGN);
#endif/* ! EMX */if (lastsig == SIGUSR1 || ((seconds && getuid() == ROOT_UID)
&& lastsig == SIGHUP))
awoken = TRUE;
/* now lock out interrupts again */
set_signal_handler(SIGUSR1, SIG_IGN);
if (getuid() == ROOT_UID)
set_signal_handler(SIGHUP, SIG_IGN);
return(awoken ? lastsig : 0);
}
#ifdefMAINintmain(int argc, char **argv)
{
for (;;)
{
printf("How may I serve you, master?\n");
interruptible_idle(5);
}
}
#endif/* MAIN *//* idle.c ends here */